I mentioned the odd Indian/Chinese idea about the magical, health giving power of men not letting their semen ever leave their bodies again in a recent post, and have now found out something else that sometimes happens as a result of this belief.
First, a magazine article about some Western dudes who have cottoned onto the idea as a way of trying to make a buck:
The Cult of Semen Retention. It's pretty amusing, the overblown claims.
But Googling the topic also brings up this topic: Dhat Syndrome.
As explained in the Indian Journal of Psychiatry:
Dhat syndrome (“semen loss”-related psychological distress) is a
culture-bound syndrome seen in the natives of Indian subcontinent, but
it is prevalent in other cultures also. Its diagnosis and management
issues need to be taught to postgraduates in their teaching program.
This syndrome involves vague and multiple somatic and psychological
complaints such as fatigue, listlessness, loss of appetite, lack of
physical strength, poor concentration, forgetfulness and other vague
somatic troubles. These symptoms are usually associated with an anxious
and dysphoric mood state. These patients may also present with or
without psychosexual dysfunction. The management of Dhat syndrome needs
serious attention.
And more details. First, this is why (some) Indians think semen is so important for health:
Since then, myth prevalent among people of the Indian subcontinent is
that “it takes 40 days for 40 drops of food to be converted to one drop
of blood, 40 drops of blood to make one drop of bone marrow and 40 drops
of bone marrow form one drop of semen.”
You would have thought human biology being a subject in schools would help, but I don't know.
The author then goes on to draw a wider net, alleging that anti-masturbation crusades in Western countries in the past reflects the same sort of attitude. It partly does, but still, this Dhat Syndrome is something else:
The patients who presented with symptoms
of Dhat syndrome were mostly young, recently married, belonging to
average or low socioeconomic status (perhaps a student, laborer or
farmer by occupation), from rural area and from family with conservative
attitudes towards sex.[
12,
16,
17]
Patients having Dhat syndrome can be further divided into three categories.[
18]
Dhat
alone - Patients attributed their symptoms to semen loss; presenting
symptoms - hypochondriacal, depressive or anxiety symptoms
Dhat with comorbid depression and anxiety - Dhat was seen as an accompanying symptom
Dhat with sexual dysfunction
The duration of presentation of these patients from the onset varies from less than three months up to one year,[
5,
16] even up to 20 years.[
10] These patients reported that they lose their semen in sleep, with urine, masturbation, hetero/homosexual sex.[
10,
16,
17,
19]
In other words, it seems that their belief in the health enhancing importance of semen is so strong that even having a young man having sex within marriage can freak out that it's harming him. As I say, pretty peculiar.
The syndrome even has a
Wikipedia entry. But here is another,
better backgrounder about it (from the Indian Journal of Dermatology, for some reason):
Ayurvedic literature describing semen as a vital
constituent of the human body dates back to 1500 BC. The disorders of
‘Dhatus’ have been elucidated in the Charak Samhita, which describes a
disorder called ‘Shukrameha’ in which there is a passage of semen in the
urine. Similar conditions have been described under various names from
China (Shen K'uei), Sri Lanka (Prameha) and other parts of South East
Asia (Jiryan). Malhotra and Wig called ‘Dhat’ ‘a sexual neurosis of the
Orient’.[
4]
In China, anxiety following semen loss (Shen-K'uie) has been associated
with epidemics of Koro, which is another culture bound syndrome in
which the individual holds the belief that his penis is shrinking into
his body and disappearing. Tissot's paper in 18th century stating that
even an adequate diet could waste away through seminal emission gained
popularity amongst the emerging middle class and led Western Europe to
an era of masturbating insanity.
The International
Classification of diseases ICD-10 classifies Dhat syndrome as both a
neurotic disorder (code F48.8) and a culture specific disorder (Annexe
2) caused by ‘undue concern about the debilitating effects of the
passage of semen.’ It is a commonly recognized clinical entity in India
and South East Asia and is also widespread in Nepal, Sri Lanka,
Bangladesh and Pakistan.
Dhat Syndrome is characterized
primarily with complaints of loss of semen through urine, nocturnal
emission or masturbation, accompanied by vague symptoms of weakness,
fatigue, palpitation and sleeplessness. The condition has no organic
etiology. It may sometimes be associated with sexual dysfunction
(impotence and premature ejaculation) and psychiatric illness
(depression, anxiety neurosis or phobia).[
5]
So, there you go. I feel like drawing up a map sometimes of "bad cultural ideas that are harmful and need to go away", with China being labelled for Traditional Chinese Medicine as my first target. But the semen worrying seems to me to be more likely Indian in origin.
Update: I was curious to read what a Ayurvdic practitioner might say about the condition, and found
this site which seems to take a semi sensible line that a lot of anxiety about it is unfounded, but also includes this very specific opinion:
Charaka Samhita postulates that semen is all-pervasive within the body
like "oil in the sesamic seed" and suggests one ejaculation per week in
summer and 168 total yearly ejaculations as the optimal sexual frequency
for males.
But, but...once a week in (say) a 3 month summer would only be about 12 times. They have a fair bit of catching up to do to hit that weirdly specific "optimal sexual frequency" over the rest of the year.